The Joint Family Stimulate The Advanced Categorical of Colour And Depth of Vision Perception Among Human Newborn

Authors

Dr.B.Amutha
Senior Consultant (R&D), NIEPMD, Chennai, India.
Ms.C.Akshal Gold, M.R.Sc, B.Ed
Senior Consultant  Social work, NIEPMD, Chennai, India.

Abstract

The fundamental aim of this paper is to provide an overview and summary of recent advances in the area of visual attention in infancy. Through the 1960s and 1970s, researchers on occasion made reference to a pattern of prolonged visual fixation in infants from birth to 2 months old. The essential characteristics of this pattern included the idea that the infant was not truly in control of the fixation, but rather that the looking was held by the stimulus in an “obligatory”. In olden days there were numerous families that were living as joint families and hence the infants in the family observe different colours from family women. In recent days, families were segregated as nuclear types and in a closed community because of this infant in recent days find colours only from the artificial toys. For instance, in order to account for individual differences in the perception of the dress, it has been speculated that these differences are due to individual differences in the subjective appearance of grey.